Center for Integrated Watershed Studies

Center for Integrated Watershed Studies

Mission

Susquehanna River at Binghamton,NY Washington Street WalkingBridge

Natural ecosystems purify water and air, modify climate, reduce flooding, and provide
natural products that are crucial to human existence, but few systems have been managed
to sustain these benefits. Watersheds are functional units by which our interactions
with the environment can be assessed, because the water that flows from a watershed
is a measure of the health of that area. Understanding and managing smaller watershed
units, such as streams, is a necessary precursor to managing larger units, such as
the river basins that shape the health and economies of their associated bays, deltas
and coastal environments. The mission of the Center for Integrated Watershed Studies (CIWS) is to serve as
a source of expertise on natural features of watersheds and human effects on watersheds.
We endeavor to address the biological, geological, geographic, economic and societal
components of watersheds, at all scales of integration - local, regional, and international,
and our activities range from field data collection for scholarly research to policy
analysis and education.

Organization

Camp Badger Reservoir, Spencer, NY

The nature of watershed study is highly interdisciplinary, and one of the main functions
of the Center is to draw together investigators with diverse expertise and interests
in watershed studies in the hopes of integrating the latest knowledge across all disciplines
pertaining to watershed management. In June 2003, the Office of Research and Sponsored
Funds at Binghamton University formally recognized the Center for Integrated Watershed
Studies as a Research Center. The Center has nine core faculty members, including
the director, Dr. John Titus, and Associate Directors, Drs. Joseph Graney and Burrell
Montz, drawn from the departments of Biological Sciences, Geology and Environmental
Studies, and Geography. The synergism created by the shared interests of these individuals
has contributed to the submission of grant proposals to NSF, EPA, USGS, and USDA.
The Center has established important off-campus relationships, including a partnership
with the Upper Susquehanna Coalition, which is a federally supported multi-county
network of natural resource professionals who develop strategies, partnerships, programs
and projects to protect and manage the headwaters of the Susquehanna River and Chesapeake
Bay watersheds. The Center's educational efforts include plans to create certificate
programs in watershed studies, and to be a major participant in the establishment
of a large Life Sciences Learning Center for all levels of educational involvement
and public outreach. Resident and visiting watershed/ecosystem experts also contribute
to the educational aspects of CIWS and enhance the outreach program.

Future Vision

It is the vision of CIWS to expand under a larger umbrella into an Institute for Environmental
Systems Research at Binghamton University, with additional Centers in such areas as
Environmental Policy, Environmental & Public Health, Global & Environmental Change,
and Environmental Impact Assessment, and to span many more departments and some of
the professional schools. CIWS is rapidly expanding its research activities and its
educational and training mission. We are developing a Graduate Certificate in Watershed
Studies, and offer undergraduate internships in area projects. We also expect to expand
our consulting activities, become more involved in downstream impacts on the Chesapeake
Bay, and apply what we learn from our local and regional studies to solving problems
both here and abroad.